September third-hottest globally on record: Climate monitor
- September 2025 was reported as the third-hottest September globally, according to the Copernicus ERA5 dataset.
- Record heat in September 2025 intensified wildfires in California, highlighting the effects of temperature anomalies, as reported by AP.
- The 10-year temperature anomaly has increased from-0.7°C to +0.43°C since 1940, reflecting human-induced greenhouse gas emissions, as noted in the IPCC's 2023 report.
- Global surface temperatures rose to 1.1°C above pre-industrial levels from 2011 to 2020, based on data from NOAA Climate.gov.
46 Articles
46 Articles
The global average temperature was around one and a half degrees higher than the pre-industrial average. In Austria, the month was also very mild
The overall average temperature was 16.11 °C, which represents an increase of 1.47 °C compared to the pre-industrial period.
The last month of September, with an average temperature of 16.11 degrees Celsius, was not far from the 2023 and the second, September 2024. Human activity is the greatest cause of this increase.
The year 2025 was the third warmest month of September ever measured on Earth, with high temperatures near the poles and in Eastern Europe, according to data published on Thursday by the European Observatory Copernicus. ...
The average temperature reached 16.11°C, 1.47°C higher than the pre-industrial period.
The month of September, with an average temperature of 16.11°C, was 1.47°C above the pre-industrial period (1850-1900), before the climate warmed sustainably as a result of human activity.
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